Dave Nitz

Sport: Distinguished Service Award in Sports Journalism

Induction Year: 2019

University: Louisiana Tech

Induction Year: 2019

With nearly six decades under his belt as a broadcaster, Nitz works in a booth named for him at Joe Aillet Stadium in Ruston. In 2011, he was a Louisiana Tech Athletics Hall of Fame inductee and also was chosen as Louisiana Sportscaster of the Year.

Nitz began his broadcasting career in the early 1960s calling minor league baseball for the Baltimore Orioles farm system in Bluefield in his native state of West Virginia. He began his college broadcasting career at Georgia Southern in 1967, moving to William & Mary in 1970 where he worked for the next three seasons alongside head football coach Lou Holtz. Now, he broadcasts Tech games with Holtz’ son, Skip, as the Bulldogs’ football coach.

After a year at Arkansas Tech, Nitz moved to Louisiana Tech in 1974 when he was hired as the Voice of the Bulldogs as well as the director of promotions and coordinator of the Louisiana Tech Radio Network. He worked with 2004 Distinguished Service Award recipient Keith Prince in the university’s sports information office for more than a decade.

Nitz is the longest-active college play-by-play announcer ever in Louisiana and the third-longest active play-by-play announcer at one university in the country (behind only Washington State and Pitt nationally) while in the midst his 44th season as Voice of LA Tech when he received the call for induction into the state hall of fame.

His description of a Louisiana Tech touchdown in the closing seconds for a 29-28 upset of Alabama in 1999 was included in “Heart Stoppers and Hail Mary’s,” a book listing “The 100 Greatest Calls in College Football History.”

He was also the voice of the nationally-acclaimed Lady Techster basketball program in the late 1970s and early 1980s, calling back-to-back national championship games in 1981 and 1982.

Nitz has won first place in the Louisiana Sports Writers Association college broadcaster play-by-play contest three times in the last five years.